What might be a solution to the differential equation of

Helen Lewis

Helen Lewis

Answered question

2022-01-20

What might be a solution to the differential equation of the form
xy=cyy+d
where y=y(x) and c,d are constants? I am supposed to simply state a solution to this, but I don;t think it is all that obvious.

Answer & Explanation

maul124uk

maul124uk

Beginner2022-01-20Added 35 answers

The only thing I can think of is to try to obtain a solution as a power series. First of all, the change of variable y=dz changes the equation into
xz=αzz+1,α=cd.
Look for a solution of the form
z(x)=n=0anxn=a0+a1x+a2x2+a3x3+
It is easy tio check that the only possible value for a0 is a0=0. Then
xz=2a2x+6a3x2+12a4x3+
αzz+1=αa1x+α(a2a12)x2+α(a132a1a2+a3)x3+
Equating coefficients of equal powers, we can find an expression for an in terms of a1,,an1:
a2=αa12,
a3=α6(a2a12),
a4=α12(a132a1a2+a3),
=
The value of a1=z(0) is unrestricted. Of course, to prove that z is in fact a solution, one must show that the series has a positive radius of convergence.
Thomas White

Thomas White

Beginner2022-01-21Added 40 answers

Try y=d exp(x)(d0). Then we have
x(dexp(x))=cd exp(x)d exp(x)+d
which after simplification gives an implicit solution:
y=cexp(x)x(exp(x)+1).
Which can be further simplied as :
y=cexp(x)y+xy2+yx=c exp(x).

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